You are on page 1of 20

;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '

7 E






To say that Jews are recognizable by their writings may sound racist, but much is
being said today about the notion that writing may be a vehicle by which to
think through ethnic identity (Budick 1). I intend in this paper to contribute to
the discourse on ethnicity, multiculturalism, and Jewish identity arguing that
ethnicity must not be suppressed. If a mindset exists among the majority culture
which advocates denying the Jewish writer an honest expression of the self, such
an attitude demeans the entire corpus of writing coming out of such a culture.
Especially for Jewish writers, acceptance on their merit as hyphenated Jews
conscious of their dual heritage has been slow in coming, and the negative
attitude toward Jews, Jewish culture, and the Jewish experience has left an
indelible stamp on Jews as a people and as individuals.
Minority writing may be seen as a genre with a moral message. In America, if its
message is accepted by the white, dominantly Christian majority, it may
transform [the Amercians] idea of America (Budick 6). In Budicks view such
a process is unavoidable, and in the end America will recognize that individual
integration is no longer invisible, at least on the cultural level, something
which I interpret as an acceptance of the existence of hybridity and the
multicultural nature of America (7). This puts a great responsibility on the ethnic
minority American writer, for according to Budicks argument paving the road to
ethnic integration and the acceptance of multiculturalism is up to the ethnic
minorities themselves. Budick sees Jews and African-Americans as the perfect
candidates to build the necessary models of dialogue which would make possible
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity
and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
Keywords: Jewish identity, multiculturalism, hybridity
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
8 E
a more general debate between Christians and Jews and a more local, American
conversation between blacks and whites (Budick 11). Nevertheless, Jewish
writers remain at a disadvantage because of the complex way Jews are perceived
by the dominant culture. In The Ghostwriter, Philip Roth illustrates how issues
of voice and ethnicity are affected by pressures brought to bear on Jewish
writing.
The Ghostwriter was published in 1979, but the story is set in 1956 and revives
the controversy surrounding the dramatization of Anne Franks The Diary of a
Young Girl on Broadway. In this paper I will refer to this book as the Diary.
Anne Franks Diary was first published in Holland in 1947 under the title Het
Achterhuis van Anne Frank. It was translated into many languages and became
the symbol of the persecuted Jewish child (Ravvin 63). Its commercial success
brought about the decision to adapt the Diary for the stage and Broadway. The
subsequent controversy surrounding the stage version raged around the point that
the play had virtually ignored the fact that the Franks were Jews. However, the
dissenting voices that protested the Hollywood-type adaptation failed to have an
impact on the character of the play. Almost twenty years later, and more than a
decade after the Eichmann trial, Philip Roth revived the controversy in order to
address the question of Jewish identity, and the way artistic freedom is curtailed
by denying the writers ethnicity. Roth points an accusing finger at those who
presume to underplay the role of Jewish identity in the tragedy of the Frank
family. He also returns the focus on the injustice of allowing ethnic identity to be
the basis for any kind of judgment by another group.
Today we may take it as a given that the Shoah was a centering experience
which left its mark on Jews everywhere (Cohen 1). More importantly, however,
immediately after the Shoah it seemed that killing six million Jews, one and a
half million of them children, had actually shaken the entire Western world.
Therefore, it is disturbing that the Jewish aspects of the Jewish persecution were
underplayed in order to assure a sympathetic reception by the general public, or
boost box office revenue. Books such as Beyond Marginality, Breaking Crystal,
and In the Shadow of the Shoah delve into the question of Jewish identity as
influenced by the Shoah with a focus on literary expression. Nevertheless,
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E9
interest in and sympathy with Jewish ethnic expression apparently remain
problematic, and Jews continue to look over their shoulders at the majority
culture. Cynthia Ozick warns against this phenomenon and writes that, [if] we
blow into the narrow end of the shofar, we will be heard far. But if we choose to
be Mankind rather than Jewish and blow into the wider part, we will not be heard
at all; for us, America will have been in vain (Ozick 177) Similar to Ozicks
assertion, in The Ghostwriter, Philip Roth blows into the narrow end of the
shofar and takes on both Jews and Gentiles who are willing to sacrifice Jewish
content for the sake of a more palatable, universal outlook.
Until Ravvin, little focus has been placed on the character of Anne Frank in
Roths novel. Critics may have been more comfortable treading familiar ground.
According to Joseph C. Voelker, The Ghostwriter is the fictional Nathan
Zuckermans bildungsroman, since he finds his stride in the novel (Voelker
89). Considering the large number of characters-as-writers in the novel, and his
eventual emergence as a writer, it may be asked whether this book is indeed a
bildungsroman in terms of Zuckerman. Perhaps it is more a kuenstlerroman for
him and a bildungsroman for Anne Frank, since Roth restores her. The novel
gives us Zuckerman, a fledgling writer, and admirer of the Russian born Lonoff,
whose creative juices have essentially run out. He now teaches young college
students. Lonoff, who no longer needs to prove his genius, is looking for a new
young talent, and Zuckerman is visiting Lonoff in the hope of earning the old
mans patronage. Lonoff also has a young houseguest, an emaciated, yet
hauntingly beautiful young woman who eventually reveals herself as Anne
Frank. Her status in the household is unclear. Zuckerman reads the girls
suffering in her body language, and becomes obsessed with her. In Roths novel
Anne Frank returns to life. This gives her a completely new status. Suddenly she
has a future, is no longer a dead victim but a survivor, and if the novel is to be
taken literally, even an avenger.
The title of the book is also ambivalent. Literally, a ghostwriter is a writer who
helps a famous person to produce an autobiography, but here we have multiple
layers of ghosts writing. Philip Roth, the flesh-and-blood author writes the
fictional life of Nathan Zuckerman. In The Ghostwriter, Nathan Zuckerman
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
10 E
rewrites Anne Franks life. This is another ambiguity: is he her ghostwriter or is
she a ghost who writes? The book allows Anne Frank to relate events not laid
down in her diary but anchored in the collective Jewish suffering of the
concentration camp. Roth presents Annes story through the narrow end of the
shofar.
In 1956 Anne Franks Diary was performed on Broadway, and Roths conceit of
giving voice to a dead girl, a ghost, in order to redress the issue of the Jewish
content of her existence is laudable. However, The Ghostwriter was hardly
universally acclaimed. Some critics condemned his book as a falsification of the
Holocaust (Shatzky 107-110). I believe the shoe is on the other foot. In Roths
eyes, taking away the salient Jewish aspects of the Diary and portraying Anne as
simply a young girl growing up in occupied Holland are a great injustice done to
the Jewish People. Indeed, others thought so as well, for initially two theatre
versions of the diary were written, and the difference between the two versions
lay in the emphasis on and adherence to Jewish content. Criticism about the
subdued Jewish content of the version put on the stage fell on deaf ears in 1956.
Two decades have to pass before any attention is once more focused on Annes
Diary. With The Ghostwriter Roth picks up the gauntlet to restore the plays
Jewish content in keeping with the chain of events of the Shoah. Roth tells his
reader how Anne Frank enters the Broadway Theater and watches the audience
watching her story (Roth 84). Annes reaction opens up the moral dilemma of
distorted history and places the guilt for her death on those who condone such
distortions. This scene with Anne watching the audience watching the play, with
Roth watching them both with the help of his fictional Zuckerman, and the
reader watching all of them, creates the sense of vertigo at the edge of the abyss
suitable to the fearful events of the Shoah. First of all, with Anne in the theater,
the audience becomes part of the events. In a sense they are now the actors and
their reaction motivates Anne rather than the plot of the play. She suddenly
understands that the plays powerful impact is largely fueled by the fact of her
death, and if the fact of her survival became known, she would be shorn of the
power that now makes the people flock to the theatre to see the play (Roth 85).
In other words, unless she is dead, the audience wont come to the theater. This
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E11
notion points an accusing finger at a society which even as late as 1956 still
allows Jewish Shoah survivors to languish in DP camps in Germany since they
have no American relatives who can sign affidavits for them.
The Ghostwriter is wholly a search for Annes Jewish identity. When Zuckerman
uses the biographical material of his relatives for his stories, his father is greatly
insulted by the unflattering portrayal of the family, yet the former insists that a
story must be true to itself and not bend to the will of others, and he rejects his
fathers notion that his stories are bound to draw any negative reaction from the
Gentiles (Roth 86-88). He wants his stories to remain as they are, while his
father wants an idealized version of the family. You didnt leave anything
disgusting out, is the elder Zuckermans accusation, and adds, You made
everybody seem awfully greedy, Nathan. When the son agrees that this is the
case, and that people really were that way, his father is upset and dismisses
Zuckermans version with the comment Thats one way of looking at it (Roth
86). This discussion is a parody of the debate around the two versions of the
Anne Frank story. The father wants an idealized representation, while the son
wants to let the reader judge his characters as they are. Not even Judge Wapter, a
father figure to Zuckerman and a symbol of authority in the community, can
change Zuckermans mind (Roth 95). Wapter adds a postscript to his letter to
Zuckerman in which he claims that the Broadway production of The Diary of
Anne Frank was an unforgettable experience (Roth 102). Wapter is happy
with the universalized version, which explains why his opinion about
Zuckermans writing should be discounted. When the conversation shifts to
what the goyim may say, Zuckerman becomes even more stubborn. He refuses
to distort his stories in order to sanitize his portrayals of Jews in his stories. He
believes that this desire to idealize is the result of anti-Semitism and should not
be encouraged (Roth 102). Mordehai Richler writes about this 1950s mindset in
1970. Again I emphasize the fact that this is post-Eichmanns trial. In Richlers
words, Jewish writers, fearful of being branded exotics, their fictions confined
to the parochial narrows, learned to lacquer their unmistakably Jewish characters
with bacon fat in the earnest hope of floating them into mainstream (Richler
111).
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
12 E
Zuckerman is both Roths alter ego and the ghostwriting mouthpiece for Anne
Frank, the message being that even if Annes voice is gone, others will write her
story and remain true to it without fear of the reaction from the general public.
Idealization has no place in this kind of narrative, and if Annes story has been
distorted to the point of insulting her memory there is nothing wrong with
reviving her in fiction. Seen through the prism of Jewish identity, bringing Anne
to life hardly insults her memory. Ravvin agrees that Roth does not desecrate it.
In Ravvins words, The Ghostwriter is an important effort that examines the
way in which aspects of the Holocaust have been received since the Second
World War (Ravvin 64). Ravvin is adamant in his claim that anyone daring to
take up writing of the Shoah must be vigilant in his or her treatment of the
various political, ethical, philosophical, and aesthetic questions raised by the
Nazi genocide (65). Moreover, Ravvin insists that such writing must carefully
avoid giving in to the pressure of opening up the text to create a greater appeal
by imbuing it with broader context (65). Again, the notion of the short end of
the shofar legitimizes Roths treatment of the events. His outrage at the way
Anne Franks play is robbed of Jewish content, enables him to enter the vault
of Jewish literary allusion, rather than allowing the shadows of historical
documentation to disenfranchise the characters ethnicity (Ravvin 19).
Meyer Levin labored to this end in 1956, but the climate was not right at the
time. The Goodrich-Hackets hollywoody script was chosen over Meyer Levins.
This choice may be interpreted with the help of a 1952 article by Bruno
Bettelheim about the popularity of Anne Franks Diary. Bettelheim starts out by
saying that the very scope of the cruelty perpetrated on the Jews by the Nazis
was so horrendous as to be virtually unbelievable (Bettelheim 246). Bettelheim
suggests three possible reactions to knowledge of the Nazi crimes. The first is
rationalization: any person who could do something so horrible must be insane
or perverted. This leaves most human beings innocent and clears them from any
collective guilt. Second, the reports about acts of mass murder, torture and
medical experiments on human beings were denied or declared exaggerations.
The Nazi propaganda machine used this tactic in order to cast into doubt any
reports of atrocities. The result was that people accepted a watered-down version
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E13
of the reports. Third, even if reports were believed, they were quickly repressed,
and the lack of publicity ensured that the details would soon be forgotten
(Bettelheim 246). These mechanisms, according to Bettelheim, influenced not
only peoples opinions, but also their attitude to the survivors. In turn they even
affected the way writing about the Shoah and the death camps were received
(247).
Anne Franks Diary was extraordinarily attractive to the general public because
it virtually made no mention of horror. The reader finds an entire family living
together; children study math and literature; a boy and a girl discover themselves
and each other; and all this creates an illusion of normality and romanticizes the
Shoah. It is a statistical fact that Shoah testimonies of death and violence were
much less popular (Bettelheim 247). Perhaps this is so because such tales forced
people to deal with facts which were too uncomfortable to face. It was
uncomfortable to know that Anne died because she was Jewish, and her death for
vague reasons made it more palatable. However, it is important to remember that
Anne never denies the familys Jewishness or underplays its importance to their
predicament. Throughout her Diary, she mentions their Jewishness as the one
and only reason for the familys incarceration in the Annex.
In The Ghostwriter, Anne Frank survives the war, and it should come as no
surprise that this survival is kept secret in the book. Anne does not even tell her
father that she is alive (Roth 59). She understands that her survival would have
shattered the myth of a heroic child and her tragedy. In John Leonards words,
her witness would be sullied (85). Bettelheim claims that the most important
step to increase ones chance of survival was to accept that circumstances were
indeed extraordinary and as such demanded extreme action, but Otto Frank clung
to symbols of normal life. The Diary projects this pseudo-normality, and readers
may easily fail to grasp the Frank familys dire predicament. By maintaining
routine the Franks created a measure of business as usual, and by denying that
death lay outside their door, they were able to retain some sense of balance
(Bettelheim 256). When Bettelheim dwells on the uncanny success of the Anne
Frank story, he insists that the uncritical response to the Diary is due to the
Frank familys desire to continue their usual daily attitudes and activities,
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
14 E
although surrounded by a maelstrom apt to engulf [them] at any moment (247).
Taking Bettelheims classification of the way people deal with atrocity, it is
possible to draw the conclusion that the success of the play and the movie based
on it are largely the result of a simple, human wish to forget the gas chambers
by glorifying the Frank familys retreat into an extremely private, gentle,
sensitive world (247). The less mention is made of the Franks Jewishness, the
easier this process becomes. Bettelheim would therefore agree that the play
twists the spirit of the Diary since the latter never denies the Franks ethnicity.
Anne unequivocally remains true to herself and her Jewish roots, and never
allows that only very few people are responsible for the killing going on. She
lays the blame for her suffering upon all mankind by declaring that [t]heres in
people simply an urge to destroy, an urge to kill, to murder and rage (Diary
244-5).
The Secret Annex stands in the heart of Amsterdam, and its occupants can look
down on the city, but they are physically removed from its daily life.
Emotionally they try to do the same. The reader can easily identify with this
routine. The Franks ambience is also more palatable than say- finding a hiding
place in a pigsty or a hayloft, as some Jews did. In the Secret Annex, after all,
only a pane of glass separates the family from the rest of the world. The situation
seems normal, comic at times, tense at others, but the reader can imagine himself
there. Nevertheless, in the final analysis, the glass pane of the attic window and
the secret door through which the familys Gentile rescuers come and go are the
only physical barriers between the outside world and the Franks tiny Jewish
ghetto. Unfortunately, flimsy as these barriers are, they might as well have been
an electrified fence. The Franks are prisoners inside the Annex, but they pretend
that they are not. Moreover, it is undeniable that the only reason they are there,
and the only thing that sets them apart from the general public is their
Jewishness, and this is also the one and only cause for their predicament. Take
away the Franks Jewishness and there essentially is no story. They could have
come and gone through the secret door, could have opened the glass window in
the attic, and could have ridden away on one of the bicycles parked near the
entrance to the complex. In other words, underplaying the Jewish character of
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E15
their persecution would seem to be a questionable, if not stupid choice, which
distorts the entire story.
So why did Otto Frank prefer the Goodrich-Hacket script? According to Meyer
Levin, Otto Frank did not want to bring home the Holocaust experience in too
much of its Jewish essence in the play (Ravvin 72). Arthur Miller wrote about
Broadways negative attitude to an emphasis on Jewishness immediately after
the war. In the late 1940s, his plays are rejected because of overtly Jewish
content (Miller, Concerning Jews Who Write 10). Meyer Levin had to deal
with a similar reality in the 1950s. But Otto Frank was a survivor who had lost
his entire family because they were Jews. How could he make such a statement?
It boggles the mind. What other essence is there in the killing of Jews? Otto
Frank played into Broadways needs, but recently some new facts have come to
light concerning the mans tragic existence which may explain a great deal. A
recent book about his life suggests that he was the victim of blackmail, and many
of his decisions were motivated by a deep desire to keep controversy at bay. In
my opinion the poor man was completely guilt-ridden. It appears that Otto
Franks firm may have had some dealings with the German army during the
occupation of Holland. This information emerges from Carol Ann Lees
biography of Otto Frank entitled The Hidden Life of Otto Frank. She claims that
Franks fear of exposure forced him to act according to the wishes of a Dutch
Nazi, who may well have been responsible for the betrayal and subsequent death
of most of the family (Shulevitz 31). This claim, outlandish as it seems and in
spite of the fact that the accusation of cooperation with the Germans was a
spurious one considering that most firms could not survive without dealing with
the Germans, has a certain logic to it. How else to explain Otto Franks
willingness to distort his familys story or the startling pronouncement about
underplaying the Jewish content of the Shoah? What Shoah survivor could
possible claim that his suffering was the result of anything but a Jewish
essence? It is also incomprehensible that Otto Frank would have willingly
allowed the cynical exploitation of his daughters innocence by putting words in
her mouth which he knew to be lies. Therefore, the idea of blackmailing a broken
man seems a definite option. Otto Franks biography further states that Annes
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
16 E
father did not know that his blackmailer had also been his betrayer. I find it
impossible to believe that he could have kept silent and continued to pay his
blackmailer had he known.
A major distortion of the play concerns Annes well-published belief in the
goodness of mankind. It may be her most famous line, but it is the line of a child
who continues to hope for a better world and can therefore write that in spite
of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart (Frank 236-237).
This line, taken out of context, became the most controversial one of the play,
and Bettelheim and Roth both labored to reinstate the meaning of this line as
written by Anne. Goodrich-Hacket turned it into a kind of slogan for the entire
play by repeating it several times. When the Broadway Anne elaborates on her
familys suffering, she puts down their predicament to the human condition and
universal suffering. The play virtually disregards the fact that the familys
Jewishness is the one and only reason for their persecution, and allows only that
in our cruel world suffering is meted out to different groups in turn. Now, she
apologetically admits, it is simply the turn of the Jews to suffer (Levin 168).
Levin sees the fictional Annes speech as a distortion of the diary, and therefore
an affront to the flesh and blood Anne, the victim of Nazi persecution of the
Jews. He turns to the narrow end of the shofar by quoting the diary.
More than twenty years after the plays production on Broadway, Philip Roth
picked up the gauntlet thrown down by Meyer Levin and condemned the
universalized script. Roths multilayered narrative goes to the heart of Jewish
identity. The Ghostwriter is written by a champion of the Jewish People who
refuses to accept a play about Jewish suffering in an atmosphere in which it was
not a time to come forward with a play about Jews (Miller, Concerning 9,
Crandell 87). Quoting Arthur Millers words here is a sad irony because what is
the Anne Frank story about if not about Jews? Underplaying the Jewish content
gives the entire script a sinister aura, since it takes away the essential meaning of
the suffering and murder of six million people. Allowing for the persecution of
the Jews as a natural outcome of 2000 years of anti-Semitism may be a very
bitter pill to swallow, and to take responsibility for such events is a lot to ask. It
is much easier to view the Shoah as an extra-historical event, since it allows one
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E17
to ignore its lessons. Bettelheim says that human beings ignore things they
cannot face. Millers fictional character Joseph Keller makes a similar
observation: I ignore what I gotta ignore in relationship to his own actions
(Miller, All My Sons 52). Ignoring the unpleasantness makes us all get along. No
one rocks the boats. No one makes accusations. No wonder, then, that Philip
Roth is unpopular when he refuses to ignore the facts.
The Ghostwriter is a defense of Anne Frank, her amputated childhood, capture,
and death. It is an affront to the girls suffering to proclaim the play a portrait of
adolescence (Brooks ix) since that statement implies that Anne did not even die,
or that her final two years placed her in an environment that was normal and
conducive to adolescent mental health and growth. Moreover, it is an affront to
the girls suffering and the suffering of other girls like her if one allows the myth
that the Frank family was only marginally Jewish. After all, the Franks religious
observance was never a question here. The Nazi strain of anti-Semitism was
based on genetics and not ritual. Nuns died in Auschwitz because they had a
Jewish mother. Ravvin also takes great exception to the plays hint that the
Franks are more Christians than Jews. In his view, this is a sinister exploitation
of their assimilation.
The prop used to bring home this message is a Christian Bible given to Anne as a
Chanukah gift from her father. In the Diary Anne explains that Chanukah is a
kind of Jewish Christmas. However, the play overemphasizes the gift to create
the impression that the Franks Jewishness is completely negligible (Ravvin 73).
This attitude ignores that fact that the Franks measure of Jewish religious
observance is not the issue. Their predicament was solely the result of their
Jewish ancestry, a fact completely beyond their control. Nevertheless, the play
presumes to define the familys ethnicity based on religious observance.
This point of view denies the Franks the right to possess a Christian Bible and
yet continue to see themselves as Jews. In other words, the play denies the
family the right to define its own ethnic identity, should they wish to do so. In
my opinion, however, the gift needs to be seen in the wider context. Otto Frank
wants to give his children a normal environment that allows them to look ahead
and plan their future within the context of the greater society. Giving Anne a
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
18 E
Christian Bible does not suggest that she should become a Christian, or that
Frank wished he were one. After all, he gives it to her on Chanukah, and the fact
that the family celebrates this holiday should prove that they are aware of Jewish
tradition. Otto Frank may have chosen a puzzling gift for his daughter, but
whether such a gift is appropriate was entirely his prerogative. In the Diary there
is no confusion. Anne writes that the gift was intended to give me something
new to begin Daddy asked Koophuis for a childrens Bible so that I could find
out something about the New Testament at last. When Margot seems
somewhat perturbed by his choice for a Chanukah gift, Otto agrees that Jesus
doesnt go with Chanukah (Frank 102). This is hardly a pronouncement by a
person interested in changing his daughters religious beliefs. Moreover, the
childrens Bible also includes the Hebrew Scripture, a fact ignored in the play.
Most of all, Anne writes that it was a hardship to light the candles. Because of
the shortage of candles [they] only had them alight for ten minutes, but it is all
right as long as you have the song, referring to Maoz Tsur (Frank 51). From the
Diary it emerges that the family knew something about the halahic aspects of the
holiday, and that Chanukah was a yearly celebration. Anne goes on to describe
that in the Annex they celebrated Sinterklaas, a non-sectarian gift-giving event
typically Dutch, which is celebrated on December 5th, and that none of [them]
had ever celebrated this event before (Frank 52). Most likely they did so
because their Dutch rescuers had little gifts for them. In my opinion there is a
sense of definance in celebrating Chanukah in the Annex, and therefore,
interpreting this Christian Bible as an overt act in denouncing Judaism is wrong,
both factually and morally. Drawing this conclusion is detrimental to the
freedom of every individual to determine his/her own hybrid identity. The extent
of the Frank familys ethnic multi-culturalism is apparent from the fact that Otto
Frank reads the plays of Goethe and Schiller to his daughter, and his wife presses
her prayer book with its German translation into Annes hands (Frank 39). In
other words, the Franks do not deny their Jewishness, although they seldom
discuss it. I believe, therefore, that Philip Roth takes great exception to the
notion that the Broadway play treats Annes life as an exalted comment on the
human spirit (quoted in Graver 89), since it represses the fact that the subjects
of persecution and oppression are Jewish. I believe this to be the The
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E19
Ghostwriters main reason for being. It brings back the repressed-- literally.
Anne is a ghost brought back to life to fight for its people. This theme of the
ghost-fighter appears also in Hong-Kingstons The Woman Warrior: memoirs of
a girlhood among ghosts, and in De Langes A Trek for Trinie. In both cases the
repressed rises to stand up for their clan. Roth allows the ghost of Anne Frank to
speak and gives Anne the platform ironically denied her on the Broadway stage.
Roths book is not popular. It does not entertain, is hard to read, and difficult to
understand without some historical background. Ravvin writes that critics
looked upon [it] as one of the authors scandals (64). Some even denounce the
book as a falsification of the Holocaust (Schatzky 107) and accuse Roth of
writing it for personal gain and in total disregard of the known historical
record (Schatzky 110). I must ask why the Broadway play was not condemned
with the same argument, since it certainly did all the above. Jewish identity
cannot be defined by socio-cultural attitudes popular at a given time. Jewish
definition cannot be hidden or distorted to please anyone who is made unhappy
by an individuals definition. But, as Norman Mailer writes, a minority man
grows up with a double image of himself, his own and societys (Richler 83).
This statement must have been abundantly clear to Roth. He addresses this
notion of approval and disapproval of the Jews and Jewish life (Roth, Reading
Myself and Others 151). To illustrate his displeasure with Jewish self-
consciousness, he publishes his responses to letters from disgruntled (Jewish)
readers. One such letter complains about a Roth character called Epstein, an
adulterer. The reader cannot fathom why Roth would choose such a protagonist.
Roths portrayal, according to the letter-writer, will reflect badly on the Jews, for
people will see adultery as a Jewish trait (Roth, Reading, 151). Roth responds:
Anna Karenina commits adultery with Vronsky, with consequences more
disastrous than those Epstein brings about. Who thinks to ask Is it a Russian
trait? (Roth 151-2). In response to the criticism that he cannot write this way in
America, and that only in Israel his works may be judged on literary merit alone,
Roth argues that this mindset underscores how complicated it is to be a minority.
In America, a Jew cannot be portrayed as an adulterer because too many non-
Jews might see Jewish adultery as a trait (Roth 152). However, Jews have long
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
20 E
been concerned with the reaction of the majority culture. This is part of our
conditioning. Miller and Levin were defeated by the strength of public opinion,
and Philip Roth too must deal with what the Gentiles will say: Jews opposed to
Roths conceit of reviving Anne Frank claim that she is an icon, a martyr, who
represents the noble resistance of the Jewish People before the onslaught of the
Nazi killing machine. This is all quite true, but the protest is lodged to the wrong
address.
With The Ghostwriter, Roth does not portray Jews who are idealized and pure,
nor will he condone the trampling under of a fellow Jews Jewish identity. Roth
sees the play as a betrayal to the spirit of Annes diary, and an affront to the
Jews. He wants to set the record straight. For this he needs some kind of
continuity between Anne and the rest of the Jewish People. He establishes it by
placing Anne in the Biltmore hotel in New York (Roth, The Ghostwriter 88).
Anne has arrived in the United States incognito and expects to keep her true
identity hidden. As long as she is a [dead] victim of the Nazi persecution, she has
a platform. Her Diary is read. But, if she were alive, she would be only one more
survivor. Many are still living in DP camps. They are not particularly popular,
nor do they enjoy much help from Gentile humanitarian organizations. Few
countries open their borders to the survivors of the death camps. America refused
to issue them visas until 1952 (Encyclopedia Judaica, see under Displaced
Persons). Their countries of origin were at times hostile, or indifferent at best.
Annes conclusion that she must remain dead if she wants her voice to be heard
is quite understandable. So she lives at the Biltmore and keeps to herself (Roth
89).
The Biltmore Hotel is an old establishment, and indelibly bound up with the
history of the Jewish People, for this hotel was the location for a significant
Zionist conference in 1942, and it lent its name to the declaration of policy which
became a cornerstone of the Zionist movement. The position paper, The
Biltmore Declaration called for recognition and acceptance of a Jewish national
identity. The public debate among the Jewish community was similar to that of
the Jews in Vienna nearly a hundred years earlier when they struggled for
emancipation. Jewish suffering would end only when Jews would be allowed to
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E21
decide their own fate. Situating Anne Frank at this hotel draws a clear analogy
between her Diary and the subsequent play, which because of its universalized
context had become the property of the general public and was no longer a
Jewish story. In order to return her story to her she needs an advocate a
champion. This is Philip Roth, or rather the fictional Nathan Zuckerman. The
symbolism of her residence places her within a wholly Jewish setting. She draws
strength from what happened there before. The Biltmore Conference is the
precursor of Annes call for Jewish control over her life story, and from the hotel
Anne speaks in a purely Jewish voice. Roth attempts to convince his reader that
he knows Annes true story, and that it is different from the one told on
Broadway.
Ironically, Roth, like Goodrich-Hacket, picked the most famous line of the
Diary, but he returned it to Anne. In The Ghostwriter, Anne, now called Amy,
comes to New York to see her play, and after she catches a matinee
performance she retreats to the Biltmore Hotel to plan her strategy (122). Her
plan to tell her father that she is alive is shattered when she realizes that it will
kill interest in the diary. In spite of its flaws, the play is keeping her mother and
sister alive, and based on her post-war experience, Anne/Amy realizes that no
one is interested in her as a person. She imagines how someone would come out
on the stage night after night to let the audience know that she was actually alive
and doing very well and how the women who had been so affected by her
story would suddenly scream oh no (124). She cannot face this possibility and
decides that even her father cant know about her survival. She even considers
suicide as a solution. By suggesting that her death keeps her writings alive, Roth
passes a very severe judgment on a world that is not interested in people at all. It
wants to be entertained and use such entertainment as a means of keeping the
truth at bay.
And what about Annes enduring belief in the goodness of man? In the play this
is the crux, and allows the audience to go home feeling they are in no way to
blame for what happened to the girl. This is in keeping with Bettelheims essay,
and if Anne is dead, there is no need to worry about her. But in The Ghostwriter,
Anne understands that no one has learned a thing from her suffering. As a
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
22 E
survivor she is of no importance. The Ghostwriter places Anne inside a world
which cannot take responsibility for what has happened to her. This is so even
when people appear to be sympathetic. Miss Gidding, who was a young teacher
in the school north of London continually tried to get Anne to tell her about
Europe and the concentration camps (Roth 130). Under the guise of being
interested, the teacher pesters the girl for information and finally, asks her why
it is that for centuries people have hated Jews. Anne explodes at this
question for it places the responsibility of this hatred at her feet. After the camps
she is no longer willing accept such responsibility. She answers, Dont ask me
that! Ask the madmen who hate us, and from that moment on she counts Miss
Gidding among those with whom she wishes to have no contact (Roth 131).
Eventually, she can no longer bear even the slightest contact with Gentiles. At
that point she escapes to America and for the first time comes face to face with
her Diary (Roth 135).
Roth presents the girls narrative as a symbolic mirroring of handing down
knowledge through the generations. Anne tells Lonoff who tells Zuckerman and
the reader with an admonition not to forget. The Ghostwriter twice proves that
Anne belongs to the Jewish People and wants her people to remember her story.
Roth now turns to the question of the Franks Jewish identity and that puzzling
Christian Bible. From the Diary we know that Margot was infuriated about the
book. Anne also describes her older sister as the more Jewish one. Margot
wanted to be a nurse in Palestine, while Anne had no such ambitions. Possibly
Anne was less aware of her Jewishness because of her age, and perhaps she
thought it did not solely define her. After all, she does write: the time will come
when we are people again, and not just Jews (Frank 241, Roth 142). In The
Ghostwriter this sentence reads like an accusation. Is it imaginable that Jews are
not really considered people? In a way this might explain why Jewish suffering
is not good material for theatre: it simply cannot touch anyone else. The Diary
offers no answer, but The Ghostwriter does. Could it be that Jews had invited
disaster upon themselves, writes Roth, by stubbornly repudiating everything
modern and European, not to say Christian? (Roth 144) The idea that six
million men, women, and children deserved to die for being Jews is too mind
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E23
boggling, but it becomes even more terrible when the Jewishness of the victims
is subsequently ignored in order to entertain. Roth accuses the Broadway theater
goers of being obtuse by refusing to see that what had been done to the Frank
family had been done to them just for being Jews, and that this had made
them the enemy. Roth says that what set Anne apart from the Gentile world
was a short candle lighting ceremony, and this is what earns her the death
sentence. As Roth relates, the chain of events is Anne Frank receiving the
Christian Bible from her Jewish father as a gift on a Jewish holiday. Her life is
forfeit for celebrating a harmless Chanukah song and its attendant candle-
lighting ceremony, which involves a few words in Hebrew. By celebrating a
ceremony lasting about ten minutes the Franks deserve to die. Roth sees no
need to discuss the propriety of giving a Christian Bible to a Jewish child.
Instead he foregrounds the Chanukah celebration as the trigger. Anne died not
because of the book her father gave her, but because of the candles they lit. This
is the horror. And the truth (Roth 144). Therefore, ignoring the familys
Jewishness is wrong. It ignores an essential truth, which in Roths view is
another horror and crime.
The final straw is the notion that Anne might still believe that people are really
good at heart (Roth quoting the Diary 146). The audacity of assuming that a girl
who had gone through such horrors would not learn to hate or feel anger or a
need to avenge her murdered people is too much for Roth and he will not stand
for it. He makes Anne repeat her line and denounce it. She has lost everything,
including her childish beliefs. She cannot even go back to her father, for it would
destroy that little bit of her story the world is willing to listen to. Roth makes
Anne twice a victim. She is twice murdered. Once at the hands of the Nazis and
the hatred of the Gentile world for the Jews, and once because her Jewish
essence is denied to her on Broadway. According to Roth, Anne is tired of being
a victim and wants revenge. She would kill if she could. Roth validates these
feelings in the heart of the revived Anne/Amy. Her only responsibility is to the
dead, he writes. That is why she chooses to remain dead herself. In print, their
status as flesh and blood could be restored. The Diary keeps them alive. Yet she
knows most of her family is gone, and she longs to avenge them. She wants,
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
24 E
according to Roth, an ax and not print (147). Her pen is too easily bent to the
whims of a general public, and so she prefers a real weapon now. Roths
fictional Anne Frank, the concentration camp survivor, no longer feels any
connection to that line about the goodness of people. Life has taught her
otherwise, and the fact that the play keeps her imprisoned behind those childish
words infuriates her. Anne wants to give vent to her own murderous hatred and
rage. She wants to start killing, splitting heads. Her only problem is that she
lacks an intended victim. In the end, Anne understands that the only weapon she
has been given to wield is Het Achterhuis, van Anne Frank. And to draw blood
with it would serve no purpose (146-47). And so she renew[s] her belief in the
power of her less than three hundred pages. I emphasize here that it is not the
play that she believes in but the Diary itself (147). Anne takes the high moral
ground here. She will protect her dead family, the people who saved her, her
father, and all that had met the fate that she had been spared (147). How ironic
this line, for Anne, of course, had not been spared and it is Roth who is her
mouthpiece. The Ghostwriter shows that the world has ignored the true lesson of
the Diary, which is that Anne should have never even set foot in the Annex. She
should have been able to finish school and live her life naturally.
To me, the power of Roths book is in its treatment of Jewish identity. Anne
Frank is dead. Her Diary has been perverted and her story altered. The changes
have stolen away the essence of her suffering. Anne would not have suffered had
she been Catholic or Protestant, Muslim or Buddhist. Accepting this truth is all
that is needed to prevent more suffering for the Jews, but in an ironic reversal,
Roth puts the burden for preventing the denial of the Jews right to define
themselves squarely on the Jews of today.
At the end Anne/Amy is not Anne Frank after all. Anne/Amy practically
evaporates at the end of the book. She disappears into the white light of the snow
without revealing her true identity (Roth 175). It is even unclear whether she is a
survivor of the Shoah, although her Jewishness is never in question. But even
that does not matter. Roth has established the notion of a collective memory for
the Jewish people. Moreover, in Zuckermans fantasy, Anne has a future. Nathan
falls in love with her. Marrying Anne would certainly please his parents he
Exploring the Vault: Jewish Ethnicity and Memory in Philip Roths The Ghostwriter
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
E25
muses, for which girl could possibly be more Jewish than her. He thinks about
having children with Anne, and symbolically at least, this ensures the continuity
of the Jewish People (170-71). Even more than that, embracing Anne as part of
himself strengthens Zuckermans own Jewish identity. The Ghostwriter, then, is
a defense of a persons right to self-definition. By offering Anne what history
denied her, Roth makes a case for the notion that Jewish identity must be the
property of the Jews. In no way may it ever be an imposed identity.


Works Cited
Bettelheim, Bruno. The Ignored Lesson of Anne Frank, Surviving and other
Essays, New York: Vintage Books, 1980, pp. 246-257.
Budick, Emily Miller. Blacks and Jews in Literary Conversation. Edinburgh
and New York: Cambridge Press, 1998.
Cohen, Arthur A. The Tremendum: A Theological Interpretation of the
Holocaust. New York: Crossroads, 1981.
Crandell, George W. Addressing the Past, Studies in American Jewish
Literature, 1997, Vol. 16, pp. 86-92.
De Lange, Wiesje. A Trek for Trinie. Jerusalem: Geffen Publishing House,
1995.
Frank, Anne. The Diary of a Young Girl. New York: Pocket Books, 1973.
Encyclopaedia Judaica. (CD-Rom edition) Keter: 1997.
Hong-Kingston, Maxine. The Woman Warrior: memoirs of a girlhood among
ghosts. Hammondsworth: Penguin Books, 1978.
Leonard, John. Fathers and Ghosts, in ed. Sanford Pinsker, Critical Essays on
Philip Roth, Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1982.
Levin, Meyer. Anne Frank: A Play. Privately published by Meyer Levin, 1967.
Miller Arthur. Concerning Jews who write, Jewish Life 2.5, 1947, pp. 7-10.
--- . All My Sons, Tel Aviv: Kellerman Publishing 1982.
Ozick, Cynthia. Toward a New Yiddish, Art and Ardor: Essays. New York:
Bela-Ruth Samuel-Tenenholtz
;:n:c ocn " : o ;: '
26 E
Alfred Knopf, 1983.
Richler, Mordecai, Bond, Shoveling Trouble. Toronto: McLelland and
Steward Ltd., 1972, pp. 55-83.
--- Porkys Plaint, Shoveling Trouble. Toronto: McLelland and Steward
Ltd., 1970, pp. 111-115.
Shatzky, Joel. Creating and Aesthetic for Holocaust Literature, Studies in
American Jewish Literature, 10, 1991, pp.14-104.
Ravvin, Norman. Philip Roths Literary Ghost: Rereading Anne Frank, A
House of Words. Montreal & Kingston: McGill University Press,
1997.
Roth, Philip. The Ghostwriter. New York: Farrar Strauss and Giroux, 1976.
--- Reading Myself and Others. Farrar, Straus and Giroux: New York,
1975.
Shulevitz, Judith. In the Gray Zone, The New York Times, 9, February, 2003,
31.
Sicher, Efraim. Beyond Marginality: Anglo-Jewish Literature after the
Shoah. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1985.
--- (ed). Breaking Crystal: Writing and Memory after Auschwitz. Urbana:
University of Illinois Press, 1988.
The Jerusalem Bible, New York: Soncino Edition, 1990.
Verhey, Elma. Om Het Joodse Kind. Amsterdam: Nijgh & Van Ditmar, 1991.
Voelker, Joseph C. Dedalian Shades: Philip Roths The Ghost Writer, Critical
Essays on Philip Roth, ed. Sanford Pinsker, Boston: G.K. Hall & Co.,
1982.

You might also like